This book was not as exciting as I had hoped. And I fear that those who simply do not like Skousen, deliberately down-rate the book as 1 star or less. So be it. They are free to do as they will.
Few people have had the security clearance, connections, access, and understanding of the FBI, politicians, and politics as Cleon Skousen. Few have the morality and integrity he had too. He is a man whose honesty I do not question, and that from experience I've had in following him for many decades and studying his works and life.
That said, while this book does exactly what it claims to do, tell the true stories from the files of the FBI, that's pretty much all it does. It is one short story narration after another. It is interesting to listen to these stories and find out what happened and to whom, but it as a little "dry" for me. Maybe that's just me. I think perhaps I like stories told more in "story form" where you feel the excitement, question, doubt, feel the apprehension, etc. You feel like you're in the story. But with this book, it was more like reading one police report after another. Not much "story excitement" as i was hoping for. But like I said, maybe that's just me. Maybe it's a sick mind that wants horrible stories from the FBI files to play out more like movies in my head. My bad.
Still, the stories were interesting, and I did find myself looking up the people he talked about so I could put a real face to the names. Then I read up a bit more on those people and that was interesting as well!
I'd rather recommend something else though. I think Skousen's "The Naked Communist" would be a much better recommendation!